Stephen Hawking’s office and archive to be preserved in UK
Papers and a diverse range of personal items belonging to the late British astrophysicist Stephen Hawking have been acquired by Cambridge University and a U.K. museum group.
Under an agreement between Cambridge University Library, the Science Museum Group and the U.K. government, the entire contents of the world-renowned scientist's office and archive will be preserved for future generations.
The £4.2 million ($5.9 million, 4.8 million euros) deal means 10,000 pages of Hawking's scientific papers and other documents will remain in the university city of Cambridge in eastern England where he died in 2018.
Objects including his wheelchairs, speech synthesisers, and personal memorabilia including his entire Cambridge office will be housed at London's Science Museum and selected highlights will go on display next year.
The Cambridge archive, which includes documents dating from 1944 to 2008 including his academic papers and TV scripts from appearances on shows like "The Simpsons", will be housed alongside papers from Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin.
The ashes of Hawking, who died in March 2018, aged 76, were interred alongside the graves of Newton and Darwin in London's Westminster Abbey.
Hawking, a theoretical physicist, dedicated his life to unravelling the mysteries of the universe, including the nature of time and space - relativity - and quantum theory, how the smallest particles behave.
He popularised the obscure science surrounding the governing rules of the universe and black holes in his best-selling 1988 book "A Brief History of Time".
As his stature grew, he became an instantly recognizable popular figure. Motor neurone disease left him using a wheelchair and unable to speak except through a voice...
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